Wednesday, October 20th, 2021
Israel reports its first case of the Delta subvariant “AY4.2” in a boy who travelled from Moldova. (The Times of Israel)
U.K. keeping ‘close eye’ on ‘Delta Plus’ coronavirus subvariant U.K. officials are “keeping a very close eye on” a new COVID-19 subvariant known as AY.4.2, also known as “Delta Plus,” the spokesperson for British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in a Tuesday BBC News report. The Delta variant mutation is not yet considered a variant of concern, but it has been blamed for an increasing number of infections in the United Kingdom. Data indicates that it might be about 10 percent more transmissible than the most common Delta strain in the U.K. “At this stage I would say wait and see, don’t panic,” said professor Francois Balloux, director of University College London’s Genetics Institute, of the variant. “It might be slightly, subtly more transmissible but it is not something absolutely disastrous like we saw previously.” BBC NEWS
United Kingdom reports 233 deaths from COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, which is the highest single-day total of daily deaths since March 3. (Inews.co.uk)
And also…why does Putin hate the Earth so much?
President of Russia Vladimir Putin says he will not attend the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, seriously weakening hopes of a breakthrough international deal on climate change. (BBC)
Mount Aso in Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan, erupts, sending smoke to 3,500 meters into the sky. The eruption began around noon local time. Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno says that there are no reports of injuries but says he heard there were climbers on the mountain before the eruption and they are checking the situation. (The Asahi Shimbun)
California Gov. Gavin Newsom declares statewide drought emergency California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) on Tuesday declared a statewide drought emergency, urging Californians to “redouble our efforts to save water in every way possible.” Most of California’s 58 counties had been in a drought emergency since July, when temperatures soared and Newsom urged residents to reduce water use by 15 percent. Water use fell by just 5 percent in August. The State Water Resources Control Board will have the authority to impose emergency regulations to help save water, including banning people from hosing down sidewalks or washing cars without shut-off nozzles. On Monday, the state announced that the water year ending on Sept. 30 was California’s driest since 1924, with 11.87 inches of rain and snow — well below the yearly average of about 23.58 inches. LOS ANGELES TIMES
FBI raids 2 homes tied to Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska FBI agents on Tuesday raided two houses tied to Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska, an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin. One of the houses was described as the oligarch’s Washington, D.C., home, although he isn’t allowed to own property in the U.S. because of sanctions imposed against him. The other property is in New York. An FBI spokesperson said the searches were related to a federal investigation out of New York. A Deripaska spokesperson said the raids were “being carried out on the basis of two court orders, connected to U.S. sanctions.” The Trump administration in 2018 imposed sanctions against Deripaska and about two dozen other oligarchs and Kremlin officials due to their connections with Putin. Deripaska was targeted “for having acted or purported to act for or on behalf of” a senior Russian Federation official, the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said. CNBC
Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announces a stay-at-home for unvaccinated or unrecovered people age 60 years and older and ordering businesses to shift 30% of their workers to remote work beginning from October 25 due to record 1,015 deaths in Russia over the past 24 hours. (CBC)
The South African Health Products Regulatory Authority rejects the Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine due to some safety concerns the manufacturer wasn’t able to answer such as failed HIV vaccines that use Adenovirus Type 5 that similar to Russian-made vaccine. (AP)
Committee votes to recommend holding Bannon in criminal contempt The select committee investigating the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot by a mob of former President Donald Trump’s supporters voted unanimously Tuesday to recommend a criminal contempt charge against former Trump strategist Steve Bannon for refusing to comply with a subpoena to provide testimony and documents. House Democratic leaders said the full House would vote on the recommendation Thursday. Bannon promoted efforts by Trump and other Republicans to overturn President Biden’s election victory, telling listeners to his radio show on Jan. 5: “Now we’re on, as they say, the point of attack — the point of attack tomorrow.” On Monday, Trump filed a lawsuit seeking to block the committee from getting White House records relating to the insurrection. CNN
Trump statement disparaging the late Colin Powell angers critics Former President Donald Trump issued a statement on Tuesday criticizing former Secretary of State Colin Powell, who died Monday of COVID-19 complications. “Wonderful to see Colin Powell, who made big mistakes on Iraq and famously, so-called weapons of mass destruction, be treated in death so beautifully by the fake news media,” Trump wrote Tuesday. Trump went on to call Powell a “classic RINO, if even that,” and concluded: “He made plenty of mistakes, but anyway, may he rest in peace!” Critics pounced on the former president. “What a vile, disgusting ‘statement,’” tweeted Republican political strategist Ron Christie. “No decent human being will defend Trump’s malevolent, spiteful, narcissistic statement on Gen. Powell,” wrote political scientist Larry Sabato. USA TODAY
Transplant surgeons successfully test pig kidney in human Surgeons in New York successfully attached a kidney from a genetically altered pig to a brain-dead woman in September, and the kidney worked with no signs of rejection. “It was better than I think we even expected,” Dr. Robert Montgomery, who led the team at NYU Langone Health, told The New York Times. “It just looked like any transplant I’ve ever done from a living donor. A lot of kidneys from deceased people don’t work right away, and take days or weeks to start. This worked immediately.” Experts in the field described the experiment as a scientific breakthrough that could lead to a vast new supply of organs for severely ill patients. “It’s a big, big deal,” said Dr. Dorry Segev, a Johns Hopkins School of Medicine professor of transplant surgery who was not involved in the research. Still, more work needs to be done. “We need to know more about the longevity of the organ,” Segev said. THE NEW YORK TIMES
Dr. Rachel Levine named 1st transgender 4-star officer Dr. Rachel Levine, the assistant secretary of health, made history on Tuesday after being promoted to become the first openly transgender four-star officer in any of the eight uniformed services in the United States. Levine, already the nation’s most senior transgender official, said she was “honored to take this role for the impact I can make and for the historic nature of what it symbolizes,” adding, “I stand on the shoulders of those LGBTQ+ individuals who came before me, both those known and unknown. May this appointment today be the first of many more to come, as we create a diverse and more inclusive future.” Levine, a pediatrician, previously served as Pennsylvania’s health secretary, and has addressed such issues as the opioid epidemic, maternal mortality, and childhood immunization. NBC NEWS
Two bombs attached to a military bus detonate as it passes under Jisr al-Rais bridge in Damascus, killing 14 people. Minutes later, military shellfire kills at least 10 people in Ariha, Idlib Governorate. (BBC)
Defence minister Sadio Camara confirms that the Islamic branch of the government is willing to negotiate with the local affiliate of al-Qaeda, a move that is strongly opposed by France. (Al Jazeera)
Nikolas Jacob Cruz, accused of the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, United States, pleads guilty on all 34 charges. (CNN)
International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi says that he plans to visit Iran by the end of November in an effort to revive the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. (Newsweek)
The Brazilian Senate releases a report recommending that President Jair Bolsonaro should face criminal charges for homicide regarding his response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the country. (Reuters)
Global investment bank Credit Suisse agrees to pay a US$475 million fine to U.S. and British authorities after pleading guilty to conspiring wire fraud towards investors, which violated the anti-corruption law of Mozambique regarding bond offerings. (AFP via RFI)
Tuesday, October 19th, 2021
Egor Babaev and collaborators with the KTH Royal Institute of Technology publish an experiment showing evidence of a new state of matter called electron quadruplets. (Phys.org)
FDA to approve ‘mix-and-match’ COVID boosters The Food and Drug Administration plans to let people get a coronavirus booster that is different from their initial vaccine, according to Monday news reports that cited officials familiar with the matter. The move could come as early as this week. The FDA won’t recommend any booster over others, the officials said, and will urge people to get a booster from the company that made their initial vaccine when possible. State health officials have been requesting freedom to give “mix-and-match” vaccines. A federally funded study released Friday found that antibody levels increased 76-fold over 15 days in recipients of Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose shot who received a Moderna booster. Similar patients who got the J&J booster got a four-fold antibody increase. THE WALL STREET JOURNALTHE NEW YORK TIMES
The Olympic torch relay begins in Olympia, Greece, without public attendance. (ANI News)
EPA moves to limit ‘forever chemicals’ in drinking water The Environmental Protection Agency said Monday it would hurry to establish enforceable limits on some polyfluoroalkyl and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), also known as “forever chemicals,” that threaten the health of millions of Americans, and are used in many products, including cosmetics, dental floss, food packaging, clothing, and cleaning supplies. Forever chemicals don’t break down normally and can find their way into the water supply. The Obama administration established a recommended but unenforceable limit of 70 parts per trillion for some PFAS chemicals in drinking water. Scientists said that level was too high to adequately protect public health. If the mandatory standards get approved in a process expected to take years, local communities could face penalties for exceeding the limits. THE WASHINGTON POST
Colin Powell, 84, dies of COVID-19 complications Soldier-turned-statesman Colin Powell died Monday from COVID-19 complications, his family said. He was 84. Powell was fully vaccinated but his immune system had been compromised by multiple myeloma, a blood cancer. “We have lost a remarkable and loving husband, father, grandfather, and a great American,” the family said. Powell started a distinguished career as a soldier who saw combat in Vietnam. He later served as national security adviser under Ronald Reagan and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under George H.W. Bush. He served as the first Black secretary of state under George W. Bush. In that post, he pushed faulty intelligence to justify the Iraq invasion, something he called a “blot” on his record. CNN THE NEW YORK TIMES
Former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell dies from COVID-19 at the age of 84 at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland. (The New York Times)
Haiti protesters call for ending gang violence after latest kidnapping Protesters took to the streets in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince on Monday calling for an end to intensifying gang violence following the kidnapping of 17 missionaries and their children. The U.S. government sent a team to work with the Haitian government and the U.S. embassy to find the group, which includes 16 Americans and one Canadian. The brazen abduction was the latest in a wave of kidnappings that has targeted everyone from street vendors to corporate executives, priests, and government officials. Angry Port-au-Prince residents have blocked roads with barricades or burning tires in some areas to show their frustration with worsening insecurity. Police have blamed the notorious 400 Mawozo gang for the kidnapping of the U.S.-based Christian Aid Ministries group, which was on a trip to visit an orphanage. THE NEW YORK TIMESTHE WASHINGTON POST
Khalilzad stepping down as U.S. envoy to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad is resigning as special envoy to Afghanistan, effective Tuesday. Khalilzad, who negotiated the U.S. withdrawal agreement with the Taliban for former President Donald Trump, was among the most senior Trump administration officials to continue serving under President Biden. His departure comes a month and a half after the last U.S. troops left Afghanistan and the Taliban returned to power 20 years after the U.S.-led invasion that ousted them. “I decided that now is the right time,” Khalilzad said in a resignation letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, “at a juncture when we are entering a new phase in our Afghanistan policy.” It was not immediately clear whether members of the Biden administration asked Khalilzad to step down. Blinken thanked Khalilzad for his work. THE WASHINGTON POST
1st day of jury selection in Ahmaud Arbery murder trial focuses on race Defense lawyers representing three white men accused of murdering Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery asked potential jurors on the trial’s first day whether the Confederate battle flag is racist. “We do know that race is an issue in this case,” said Franklin Hogue, a lawyer for one of the defendants. Three of the first group of 20 potential jurors indicated they did see the flag as racist. Former policeman Gregory McMichael, his son Travis McMichael, and neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan are accused of chasing and killing Arbery in their Georgia neighborhood. George McMichael’s vanity license plate showed the old Georgia state flag, which included the Confederate symbol. All three have pleaded not guilty, saying they thought Arbery was a burglar and were trying to make a citizen’s arrest. REUTERS
ENDF airstrikes on the city of Mekelle in Ethiopia‘s Tigray Region kill at least three people. (Al Jazeera)
Prime Minister Cleopas Dlamini orders the closure of schools across Eswatini in an attempt to stop pro-democracy protests that have occurred across the kingdom in the past few months. Protesters demand an end to the absolute monarchy of King Mswati III, the last of its kind in Africa, as ministers back the move, saying that there “is no room for such anarchy in our society”. (Bloomberg)
German publishing house Axel Springer dismisses Julian Reichelt as the editor-in-chief of its tabloid newspaper Bild following sexual harassment complaints against Reichelt from his co-workers. (The New York Times)
Russia surpasses eight million cases of COVID-19 after reporting a record for the fourth consecutive day of 34,325 new cases. (ABC News)
Phase three trial results suggest that the Valneva COVID vaccine is effective at priming the immune system to fight COVID-19. (BBC News)
Russia announces that it will be suspending its mission to NATO in Brussels as early as November 1, in response to the expulsion of 8 diplomats accused of espionage from the mission earlier this month. The NATO information bureau and military liaison in Moscow will also be terminated. (CNN)
Iraq receives Ghazwan al-Zawbaee, the alleged mastermind of the ISIL suicide truck bombing that killed 340 people in Karrada, Baghdad, in 2016, which was the deadliest single-bomb attack in Iraq. Al-Zawbaee was arrested two days prior through a joint operation in a neighbouring country. (BBC News)
State Administration Council chairman Min Aung Hlaing announces that his military junta will release a total of 5,636 jailed protesters to commemorate the Thadingyut Festival. (AFP via ABS-CBN News)
Citing Roe v. Wade, the United States Department of Justice requests the Supreme Court to vacate the mandate of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on allowing the Texas Heartbeat Act to remain in effect, thereby blocking the law. (AFP via RTL)
Ecuadorian president Guillermo Lasso declares a nationwide state of emergency, citing an increase in drug-related crime. (AFP via Manila Bulletin)
Monday, October 18th, 2021
China’s economic growth slows China’s economy grew by 4.9 percent in the third quarter, the slowest pace in a year for the world’s second largest economy, according to data released Monday. The drop from the previous quarter’s 7.9 percent pace came as supply chain delays and power outages hurt factory output. A construction downturn and fallout from the coronavirus pandemic also hurt. In the first quarter of the year, the economy grew a record 18.3 percent, as overseas buyers snapped up Chinese-made goods when the winter coronavirus surge eased. China could see more “ugly growth numbers” in coming months, and that could prompt policymakers to “take more steps to shore up growth,” said Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at Oxford Economics. REUTERS
At least 300 suspected members of a Muslim mob are arrested for the killing of two Hindu men three days ago at a temple in Noakhali, Bangladesh. The violence erupted after an alleged Quran desecration at a Hindu temple in Haziganj Upazila. Several Hindu temples were also damaged in the clashes. Four members of the mob were also killed when Bangladesh Police personnel opened fire. (Al Jazeera)
Fauci: J&J vaccine probably should have been 2 shots all along Johnson & Johnson’s single-shot coronavirus vaccine probably should always have been given in two doses, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said Sunday on ABC’s This Week. A panel of Food and Drug Administration advisers on Friday recommended emergency-use authorization for a second J&J shot to boost immunity, noting that the company’s vaccine had been shown to offer less protection than the vaccines produced by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. “What the advisers to the FDA felt is that, given the data that they saw, very likely this should have been a two-dose vaccine to begin with,” Fauci said. The FDA advisers unanimously voted to recommend booster shots for everyone 18 and older who got the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, as early as two months after the initial shot. USA TODAY
Haiti police blame notorious gang for U.S. missionaries’ kidnapping Haitian police said Sunday that the notorious 400 Mawozo gang, which has spread terror with a string of kidnappings and murders, was responsible for the abduction of 17 missionaries from the U.S.-based Chrisian Aid Ministries. The Ohio-based missionary group said the victims included five children, seven women, and five men. Sixteen are U.S. citizens. One is Canadian. The organization said the missionaries had gone to visit an orphanage when armed men seized them. Christian Aid Ministries returned its American staff to the organization’s Haiti base last year after a nine-month absence prompted by Haiti’s worsening security situation and kidnapping epidemic. Police said 400 Mawozo, which means “400 inexperienced men” in Haitian Creole, controls the Croix-des-Bouquets area where the crime occurred. THE NEW YORK TIMES
Maduro ally to make 1st appearance after extradition Colombian businessman Alex Saab, allegedly a financier of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, is scheduled to appear in court Monday after being extradited from the West African island nation of Cape Verde to the United States to face money-laundering charges. Saab is accused of using his U.S. accounts to launder money siphoned from a government-subsidized food program called CLAP to provide hundreds of millions of dollars for Maduro and his allies. “Rather than ensure that this vulnerable population receives the food it desperately needs, the regime uses the CLAP program as a political tool to reward support and punish political criticism,” the U.S. Treasury Department said in 2019. Maduro’s government has halted talks with the U.S.-backed opposition in retaliation for Saab’s extradition. BBC NEWS
‘Halloween Kills’ scores best horror-film debut of pandemic Halloween Kills, the 12th installment in the long-running slasher-movie franchise, took in $50.4 million at the domestic box office this weekend, Variety reported Sunday. It beat A Quiet Place Part II to post the biggest opening-weekend haul for a horror film during the pandemic. The debut was impressive given lingering coronavirus concerns and the fact that the film was made available to stream on Peacock at no additional cost to subscribers. The last Halloween movie to come out before the pandemic brought in $76 million in its 2018 debut. Halloween Kills was the latest in a series of blockbusters to come out simultaneously in theaters and streaming platforms as moviegoers and theaters slowly come back after pandemic-induced shutdowns. VARIETY
Ford to convert England engine plant to make electric-power units Ford said Monday it would spend $315 million transforming a northwest England factory to produce electric-power units for cars and trucks to be sold in Europe. The automaker said the factory, which currently makes engines and transmissions for gasoline-powered vehicles, will start making the electric-power units by mid-2024, with a target capacity of about 250,000 units per year. “This is an important step, marking Ford’s first in-house investment in all-electric vehicle component manufacturing in Europe,” said Stuart Rowley, president of Ford of Europe. The company aims to sell only electric passenger vehicles in Europe by the end of the decade. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Saks online unit prepares for IPO Saks Fifth Avenue’s e-commerce business is planning an initial public offering targeting a valuation of about $6 billion, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday. The last time the fast-growing online business of the luxury retailer was valued, in March, the estimate was just $2 billion. The company is interviewing potential underwriters for the IPO, which could take place in the first half of next year. The stock sale would be the second part of a deal reached earlier this year to separate the booming online business from Saks’ brick-and-mortar stores, which are growing more slowly. Saks and other department stores have seen a surge in online sales as the coronavirus pandemic encouraged people to shop from home. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Jury selection begins in Ahmaud Arbery case Jury selection is set to begin Monday for the trial of three white men charged with chasing and fatally shooting Ahmaud Arbery, an unarmed Black man who was running through their neighborhood outside Brunswick, Georgia. It is expected to take two weeks or more to pick a jury in the case, after the killing was captured on a graphic video that sparked a national outcry resulting in the arrest of father and son Greg and Travis McMichael and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan. An ex-prosecutor has been accused of “showing favor” to the suspects. Arbery’s father said he was praying for justice that Black victims are often denied. “This is 2021, and it’s time for a change,” Marcus Arbery Sr. told The Associated Press. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sunday, October 17th, 2021
The Saudi Arabia-led coalition says that they have killed 160 Houthi militants in Marib, Yemen, during 32 airstrikes in the past 24 hours. The coalition also reports that they killed a total of more than 700 Houthis during the past week. (Al Jazeera)
Saudi Arabia eases its COVID-19-related restrictions, lifting mandatory social distancing requirements as well as a requirement to wear face masks outdoors. (Arabian Business)
Russia reports a record for the fourth consecutive day of 34,303 new cases of COVID-19, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 7.99 million. (Euronews)
The French ambassador to Belarus departs following a directive issued by the Belarusian government, which did not cite a rationale. The ambassador had not presented his credentials to President Alexander Lukashenko. (AFP via The Moscow Times)
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